FAMILY TIES AND MARITAL HAPPINESS - THE DIFFERENT MARITAL EXPERIENCESOF BLACK-AND-WHITE NEWLYWED COUPLES

Citation
Sg. Timmer et al., FAMILY TIES AND MARITAL HAPPINESS - THE DIFFERENT MARITAL EXPERIENCESOF BLACK-AND-WHITE NEWLYWED COUPLES, Journal of social and personal relationships, 13(3), 1996, pp. 335-359
Citations number
29
Categorie Soggetti
Psychology, Social",Communication
ISSN journal
02654075
Volume
13
Issue
3
Year of publication
1996
Pages
335 - 359
Database
ISI
SICI code
0265-4075(1996)13:3<335:FTAMH->2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
This paper explores the relationship of family ties to black and white couples' marital happiness over the first 3 years of their marriages. Respondents were 115 black and 136 white couples interviewed as part of the Early Years of Marriage study. Although there were many similar ities in the way blacks and whites felt about and interacted with thei r families, black couples were less likely to argue over matters perta ining to family, visited their families more often but perceived fewer family members able to help if needed. Hierarchical panel regressions showed that close family ties had no effect on the marital happiness of whites but significantly predicted black couples' marital happiness , particularly the ties to the husband's family. Predictions of marita l happiness further varied by low and high structural stress (low inco me combined with early family formation), such that low-stress blacks' increased closeness to their in-laws from year 1 to year 3 predicted marital happiness. For high-stress blacks, the couple's closeness to t he husband's family in year 1 and increases in that closeness by year 3 predicted increased marital happiness. Findings point to the importa nce of accounting for both ethnicity and structural context for unders tanding the paths couples take in establishing happy marriages.